Description

Book Synopsis

After the Civil War, as Black freedmen prepared to exercise their new voting rights in Georgia, white supremacist groups rose to restrict their ability. Georgians faced a new prospect for brokering a class-based electoral coalition of white yeomen and Black freedmen.

The failure of Reconstruction echoes today as Georgia remains a voting rights battleground. This book details this struggle for racial justice and democracy in postwar Georgia, with an eye on issues that have persisted more than 150 years later.



Trade Review
“By applying quantitative tools from the social sciences as well as traditional methodologies of historians to three distinctly different urban communities and their respective regions within pre- and post-Civil War Georgia, Richard Hogan's masterful study reimagines Reconstruction-era politics in ways fraught with implications for modern U.S. politics and the rise of Trumpism. Most importantly, Hogan restores contingency to Radical Reconstruction's downfall by revealing that the potential for cross-class political alliances between southern blacks and poor whites lingered well after most historians count Reconstruction as down and out. Further, he convincingly demonstrates that stereotypical attributions of Reconstruction's reversal to Klan and vigilante terrorism obscures more than it explains. By eschewing simplistic analyses and emphasizing processes of political brokering, Hogan illuminates the agency of Georgia politicos like Joe Brown and Tunis Campbell and reveals a fascinating Georgia political mosaic and economy bound to surprise readers.” - Robert E. May, professor emeritus of history, Purdue University, author of Yuletide in Dixie: Slavery, Christmas, and Southern Memory

Table of Contents
  • Table of Contents
  • Preface
  • Prologue: The Struggle for Racial Justice and Democracy
  • 1. Marching Toward War
  • 2. Reconstructing Georgia
  • 3. Darien: Black Radical Republican Central
  • 4. Lexington: Heart of the Land of Cotton
  • 5. Trenton: The Edge of the Yeoman Frontier
  • 6. Resisting Redemption
  • Epilogue: Redeemers Still?
  • Chapter Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index

Resisting Redemption at the Georgia Polls

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Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Wed 1 Apr 2026.

A Paperback by Richard Hogan

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    View other formats and editions of Resisting Redemption at the Georgia Polls by Richard Hogan

    Publisher: McFarland & Co Inc
    Publication Date: 1/31/2023 12:12:00 AM
    ISBN13: 9781476692081, 978-1476692081
    ISBN10: 1476692084

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    After the Civil War, as Black freedmen prepared to exercise their new voting rights in Georgia, white supremacist groups rose to restrict their ability. Georgians faced a new prospect for brokering a class-based electoral coalition of white yeomen and Black freedmen.

    The failure of Reconstruction echoes today as Georgia remains a voting rights battleground. This book details this struggle for racial justice and democracy in postwar Georgia, with an eye on issues that have persisted more than 150 years later.



    Trade Review
    “By applying quantitative tools from the social sciences as well as traditional methodologies of historians to three distinctly different urban communities and their respective regions within pre- and post-Civil War Georgia, Richard Hogan's masterful study reimagines Reconstruction-era politics in ways fraught with implications for modern U.S. politics and the rise of Trumpism. Most importantly, Hogan restores contingency to Radical Reconstruction's downfall by revealing that the potential for cross-class political alliances between southern blacks and poor whites lingered well after most historians count Reconstruction as down and out. Further, he convincingly demonstrates that stereotypical attributions of Reconstruction's reversal to Klan and vigilante terrorism obscures more than it explains. By eschewing simplistic analyses and emphasizing processes of political brokering, Hogan illuminates the agency of Georgia politicos like Joe Brown and Tunis Campbell and reveals a fascinating Georgia political mosaic and economy bound to surprise readers.” - Robert E. May, professor emeritus of history, Purdue University, author of Yuletide in Dixie: Slavery, Christmas, and Southern Memory

    Table of Contents
    • Table of Contents
    • Preface
    • Prologue: The Struggle for Racial Justice and Democracy
    • 1. Marching Toward War
    • 2. Reconstructing Georgia
    • 3. Darien: Black Radical Republican Central
    • 4. Lexington: Heart of the Land of Cotton
    • 5. Trenton: The Edge of the Yeoman Frontier
    • 6. Resisting Redemption
    • Epilogue: Redeemers Still?
    • Chapter Notes
    • Bibliography
    • Index

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